Football Jigs

The Best Jig For Fishing Clean, Hard Bottoms and Offshore Structure

Football jigs have a shape like a, guess! Yep, a football. Why a
football? This shape is far less likely to "hang up" than are other
lead jigs with round or bullet shaped heads. Now that doesn't mean
their good for all circumstances. They are absolutely not intended for
fishing in grass or other forms of thick vegetation. But for hard, rock
strewn, gravel covered bottoms they can't be beat. They're lead jigs
designed to get to the bottom fast and to stay there.

If you do get hung-up with a football shaped jig head it is easier to
get loose by jiggling your line or reversing your direction and passing
back over where you are hung. This enables you to pull it free from
the same path it went in.

The reason most bass fishing jigs hang up is that they flop over
on their sides once on the bottom. When the hook is then laying on its
side on the bottom it's more likely to snag on a limb or brush limb or
anything else that might be sticking up from the bottom. Additionally,
when lead jigs are retrieved through the water and hit a limb they will
have a tendency to flop right or left placing the hook in a position to
snag the limb or stump. Football shaped lead jigs are far less likely
to, in fact, it's almost impossible for them, to flop on their
sides. They tend to keep the hook upright, especially when combines with
a buoyant plastic trailer.

Head Design Features

So what makes a jig head shaped like a football so effective? The
term "effective" must be qualified. It is not effective in grass. It
is very effective on hard bottoms covered with rock, shells, gravel and
on ledges. It's a great tool for stair stepping ledges.

The wide football head (center above) positioned perpendicular to the hook works
almost like a rake if fished in grass. It grabs and holds grass
tenaciously and seems to have an affinity for grabbing hold of wood and
brush as well. If there is a small "v" where branches join in brush I
guarantee you'll get hung there. It's the law! At least it seems that
way. The head can't get around the "v" and if you jiggle it too much the
hook impales a branch. Then you're really screwed, especially if you
are using a jig without a brush guard.

It's best to just avoid such conditions with a football jig.
Other jig designs with elongated heads, like an Arkey (Arkie) (right above)or even a
round head (left above) aren't nearly as bad about this. Go with them instead.

When and Where Do You Fish Football Head Jigs?

If you're going after deep water bass reach for a football
jig. If you're after them in shallow water in spring, reach for the
football head jigs. If it's cold and windy, a football jig. Calm, warm
day, reach for the football head jigs. In other words, fish them all
year long.

Where are the best places to fish that offer the greatest chance of catching bass?

Edges, including grass edges, channel drops, around brush
piles, just outside docks and around the circumference of humps. An
important point about grass edges. Drag the lure just outside the grass
edge. Don't work your jig into the grass. If you do you're asking for
some frustration.

Ledges are great for these jigs, especially if
they stair step. Cast to the bank, strip out some line so the jig falls
straight down. Take up slack and start your retrieve. When you've
dragged it to the edge of a step and feel it fall off then again strip
out line so it drops straight. You must be a line watcher here as the strikes often occur on the fall off the ledge.

Rocky Slopes 45° slopes that are covered
with chunk rock and rock transitions attract crawfish which in turn draw
bass. Ideal territory for football jigs.

Rocky Points are ideal for football head jigs.
They were designed with hard, chunk rock strewn bottoms in mind.
They're good for lake floors covered with shells and and gravel too.

The Nature Of The Beast

Football jigs are by their very design incapable of falling over
on their side. They don't have sides! The design is such that they
literally "stand up". When at rest (right jig head above) their hooks are extending upward at
an angle from the jig head.

As they are worked across the bottom, when
coming into contact with an obstruction be it a rock, small crevice or a
thick gravelly bottom, the lure stops but the hook, adorned with a
trailer, continues moving upwards and forward as the jig head rolls
forward in place against the obstruction.

This places the plastic trailer off the bottom moving and
appearing like a live creature (left jig head above), especially if its one that is buoyant.

How Do You Fish Them?

Though the football jig was developed to be fished by dragging
it along and always in contact with the bottom, like a Carolina rig,
there are several ways weekenders and pros alike fish them. Like so
many other things in bass fishing try several and settle on the one that
produces in your hands. Here are the primary retrieves:

Dragging

- "Dragging",this is the traditional way to
fish a football jig. Literally, while keeping your rod tip high at the
10:00 or 11:00 or low at the 7:00 or 8:00 position (which, is personal
preference) you drag the lure across the bottom taking care to keep it
in contact with it most of the retrieve. It's an attempt to imitate a
crawfish moving along the rocky structure they love so much. If you feel
your jig stop against a rock let it sit motionless for a moment. Then
jiggle it before resuming your retrieve. Bass sitting by watching it may
strike when it starts to move. Experiment with the rate of retrieve.
Let the bass tell you how they like it.

Hopping

- Hopping is a retrieve technique
often combined with dragging. As you retrieve your jig you incorporate a
few hops by pulling you rod tip back six to eight inches with three or
so quick pumps. You're not really lifting the tip, which would lift the
jig upward off the bottom. This pumping action pulls the lure just off
the bottom and across its surface, just like a crawfsh moves. The
retrieve is designed to imitate a crawfish moving across the bottom.
If you have seen craws move you know they scoot along the bottom in a
pulsating, undulating motion by thrusting with their tails beneath them.
They're not hopping straight up. They thrust with their tails which
propels them gliding just above the plane of the bottom from rock to
rock, crevice to crevice.

Stroking

- This is an aggressive action
where you actually jerk your rod upward about a foot to eighteen inches
with a an exaggerated motion lifting the jig off the bottom. You then
allow it to fall. Strikes can occur on the fall.

Swimming or Slow Rolling

- Swimming jigs
is a relatively new jig technique especially when talking football
heads. The concept of "swimming" a jig is to keep it moving near the
surface just over thick, shallow vegetation and not dragging along the
bottom as football style jigs are designed to do. However, slow rolling
one that's 1/2 or 5/8-ounce just above rip rap or a chunk rock bank can
be productive during pre-spawn.

Basically, though, "swimming" is the use of 1/2, 5/8 or
3/4-ounce football jigs at the end of long casts. They're retrieved just
above the lake floor with occasional drops to the bottom, where it lies
still, but for a short instant, before resuming its retrieve. Swimmers
are usually dressed up with baitfish colored skirts and a corresponding
color grub trailer. Even a white or silver head. These also usually
have a thinner and more flexible brush guard.

Dress Them Up!

Color is important when you're fishing football jigs. Skirt bulk
is also. Bass have a long time to look at football jigs as they are
pulled along the bottom. So make them look like something they eat. The
nice thing about jigs, football jigs here, is that you can make them appear as most anything a bass will eat by changing the color and bulk of the skirt

As with most bass fishing situations the clarity of the water is the
determining factor in color selection. Some of the most popular jig
colors in clear water are shades of green and brown, sometimes with a
little orange or red thrown in. Black and blue dominate in stained,
even muddy water. If you're swimming jigs move toward baitfish colors.
As with all bass fishing situations color choice is a very personal
thing. Use what you have confidence in.

An interesting note on color. Most baitfish, as well as
crawfish, have light colored bellies. Maybe not pure white but
certainly dirty white or light gray. It never hurts to include a bit of
white or light gray in an color scheme you're doing on a jig yourself.

As for bulk, you can change the profile by using more or fewer
skirt strands. Additionally, silicone strands behave in the water
differently than do living rubber strands. Maybe it's just me but I
swear jigs with mixed skirt material gets more strikes. I like to
combine rubber and silicone strands, thick and thin strands, solid color
and mixed color strands, even throw in a small number of flashabou
strands for a hint of flash. Sort of like mixing up ingredients for a
marinade sauce to put on that pork loin you're going to cook.

Trailers For Football Jig Heads

Trailers are a matter of personal confidence and preference. Try
and match the trailer color to that of the skirt if possible. Plastic
trailers can be large, such as G. Yamamato's Spider Grub, Netbait's Paca
Craw, YUM's Money Craw and ZOOM's Grass or Speed craws just to name a
few. Any single or double tail grub 4" or 5" long are good choices as
well.

An important consideration with jigs is the method by which
trailers are held on the jig. Many have "keepers" that hold plastic
trailers in a fashion that makes the jig weedless. An example is the
Critterbait football jig shown at right.

Thoughts On The Right Gear For Football Jigs

The best rod? Again it depends on each bass angler's personal
preference, though there are certain guidelines that can point you in
the right direction.

If fishing your jig deep you'll need a long (7' to 7 1/2'), stiff
rod so solid hook sets can be made when a lot of line is out. While
some will use a "flippin stick" a medium-heavy rod with a good backbone
will work just fine.

As for line, fluorocarbon is a good choice. It sinks, is very
abrasion resistant and strong. I use anywhere from 8lb to 14lb
fluorocarbon as my main line on a heavy spinning reel, not as a leader.
Other jig fishermen choose to use braid with a fluorocarbon leader.

My rigs are (1) G. Loomis IMX SJR 844, 7'7" heavy/fast rod
rated for 10-17lb line and 1/4-1 ounce lures coupled with a Team Daiwa
Advantage 4500S spinning reel and (2) Team All Star TAS 845ST, 7'
medium/fast rod rated for 6-17lb line and 1/8-5/8 ounce lures coupled
with a Team Diawa 3500 spinning reel. I also use the first one for
Carolina rigs.

I know guys that prefer shorter rods (6'6") for their football
jig fishing and wouldn't even think about using a spinning reel. Like
all things bass fishing, it's an individual sport, so experiment and
find tools that provide you comfort and confidence.

Baitcasting reels that have higher gear ratios (6.4:1 to 7:1)
perform well when fishing these bulky, heavier jigs. The strikes are
usually at long distance and you want to be able to take up slack
rapidly.